March 10. For the remainder of my visit, it seemed as if your prophecy of friendship were to be fulfilled. From the moment of my confidence to you, all the reserves that had been raised by my slighting of your invitations disappeared, perhaps because the secret I had shared with you served to make my past conduct less unreasonable; still more, I believe, because of the faith in you it evidenced in me. Certain I am that in the following week I felt able to be my true self when with you, for the first time since we were boy and girl together. The difference was so marked that you commented on the change. "Do you remember," you asked me, "our conversation in Mr. Whitely's study, when I spoke of how little people really It is a pleasure to me to recall that whole conversation, for it was by far the most intimate that we ever had,—so personal that I think I should but have had to question to learn what I long to know. In response to my slight assistance, to the sympathy I had shown, you opened for the moment your heart; willing, apparently, that I should fathom your true nature. We had gone to dinner at the Grangers' merely to please Mrs. Blodgett, for we mutually agreed that in the country formal dinners were a weariness of the flesh; and I presume that with you, as with me, this general objection of ours was greatly strengthened when we found Mrs. Polhemus among the guests. It is always painful to me to be near her, and her dislike of you is obvious enough to I was talking with Miss Granger, and thus did not hear the beginning of my mother's girds at you; but Agnes, who sat on my left, told me later that, as usual, Mrs. Polhemus set out to bait you by remarks superficially inoffensive, but covertly planned to embarrass or sting. The first thing which attracted my notice was her voice distinctly raised, as if she wished the whole table to listen, and in fact loud enough to make Miss Granger stop in the middle of a sentence and draw our attention to the speaker. "—sound very well," Mrs. Polhemus was saying, "and are to be expected from any one who strives to be thought romantically sentimental." "I did not know," you replied in a low voice, "that a 'romantically sentimental' nature was needed to produce belief in honesty." "It is easy enough to talk the high morals of honesty," retorted your assailant, "and I suppose, Miss Walton, that for you it is not difficult to live up to your conversational ideals. But we unfortunate earthly creatures, who cannot achieve so rarefied a life, dare not make a parade of our ethical natures. The saintly woman is an enormously difficult rÔle to play since miracles went out of style." "Oh, leave us an occasional ideal, Mrs. Polhemus," laughed a guest. "I for one wish that fairy rings and genii were still the vogue." "But we have some kinds of miracles," asserted Mrs. Granger. "Remember the distich,— 'God still works wonders now and then: Behold! two lawyers, honest men!'" "With all due deference to Miss Walton's championing of absolute perfection," continued my mother, with a cleverly detached manner, to veil what lay back of the sneer, "I find it much easier to accept the miracle of an honest lawyer than that of an absolutely uncattish woman,"—a speech which, like most of those of Mrs. Polhemus, drew a laugh from the men. "That's because you don't know Miss Walton!" exclaimed Agnes warmly, evidently fretted by such conduct towards you. "On the contrary," answered my mother, speaking coolly and evenly, "I presume I have known Miss Walton longer and better than any one else in this room; and I remember when her views of honesty were such that her ideal was personified by a pair of embezzlers." You had been meeting her gaze across the table as she spoke, but now you dropped your lids, hiding your eyes be "Oh, say something," appealed Agnes to me in a whisper. "Anything to divert the"— "And I really think," went on Mrs. Polhemus, smiling sweetly, with her eyes on you, "that if you were as thoroughly honest with us as, a moment ago, you were insistent on the world's being, you would confess to a tendresse still felt for that particular form of obliquity." I shall recall the moment which followed that speech if it shall ever fall to me to sit in the jury-box and pass judgment on a murderer, for I know that had I been armed, and my mother a man, I should have killed her; and it taught me that murder is in every man's heart. Yet I was not out of my head, but was curiously clear-minded. Though allusion to my shame had hitherto always made "Which is better, Mrs. Polhemus," I asked, with a calmness I marveled at afterwards, "to love dishonesty or to dishonestly love?" "Is this a riddle?" she said, though not removing her eyes from you. "I suppose, since right and wrong are evolutionary," I rejoined, "that every ethical question is more or less of a conundrum. But the thought in my mind was that there is only nobility in a love so great that it can outlast even wrongdoing." Then, in my controlled passion, I stabbed her as deeply as I could make words stab. "Compare such a love, for instance, with another of which I have heard,—that of a woman who so valued the world's opinion that she would not get a divorce from an embezzling husband, because of the social stigma it in The color blazed up in my mother's cheeks, as she turned from you to look at me, with eyes that would have killed if they could; and it was her manner, far more than even the implication of my words, which told the rest of the table that my nominally impersonal case was truly a thrust of the knife. A moment's appalling pause followed, and then, though the fruit was being passed, the hostess broke the terrible spell by rising, as if the time had come for the ladies to withdraw. When, later, the men followed them, Agnes intercepted me at the door, and whispered, "Oh, doctor, it was magnificent! I was so afraid Maizie would break down if—I never dreamed you could do it so splendidly. You're almost as much of a love as papa! It will teach "So long as you don't want any more vitriol-throwing," I assented, smiling. "Remember that a hostess deserves some consideration." "I told Mrs. Granger that you did it at my request, and there wasn't a woman in the room who didn't want to cheer. We all love Maizie, and hate Mrs. Polhemus; and it isn't a bit because you geese of men think she's handsome and clever, either. Poor Maizie wanted to be by herself, and went out on the veranda. I think she's had time enough, and that it's best for some one to go to her. Won't you slip out quietly?" I nodded, and instantly she spoke aloud of the moon, and we went to the French window on the pretense of looking at it, where, after a moment, I left her. At first I could not discover you, the vines so shadowed your retreat; and when I did, it was to find you with bowed "I did not intend to intrude, Miss Walton, and don't let me disturb you. I will rejoin"— "If you came out for the moonlight and quiet, sit down here," you said, making room for me. I seated myself beside you, but made no reply, thinking your allusion to quiet perhaps voiced your own preference. "It seems needless," you began, after a slight pause, "to ignore your kindness, even though it was veiled. I never felt so completely in another's power, and though I tried to—to say something—to strike back—I couldn't. Did my face so betray me that you knew I needed help?" "Your face told nothing, it seemed to me." "But that makes it positively uncanny. Over and over again you appear to divine my thoughts or moods. Do you?" "Little more than any one can of a person in whom one is interested enough to notice keenly." "Yet no one else does it with me. And several times, when we have caught each other's eyes, we have—at least I have felt sure that you were laughing with me, though your face was grave." "Who was uncannily mind-reading then?" "An adequate tu quoque," you said, laughing; then you went on seriously; "Still, to be frank, as now I think we can be, I have never made any pretense that I wasn't very much interested in you—while you—well—till very lately, I haven't been able to make up my mind that you did not actually—no, not dislike—for I knew that you—I could not "Were there no natural barriers to a friendship between a struggling writer and Miss Walton?" "Surely you are above that!" you exclaimed. "You have not let such a distinction—Oh no, for it has not stood in the way of friendship with the Blodgetts." A moment's silence ensued, and then you spoke again: "Perhaps there was a motive that explains it. Please don't reply, if it is a question I ought not to put, but after your confidence of last week I feel as if you had given me the privilege to ask it. I have always thought—or rather hoped—that you cared for Agnes? If"— "And so you married me to her in You laughed merrily as you said, "Oh, I'm so glad you spoke of that. I have often wondered if you recognized the attempted portrait,—which now I know is not a bit of a likeness,—and have longed to ask you. I never should have dared to sketch it, but I thought my pen name would conceal my criminality; and then what a fatality for you to read it! I never suspected you were the publisher's reader. What have you thought of me?" "That you drew a very pleasant picture of my supposed mental and moral attainments, at the expense of my ambition and will. My true sympathy, however, went out to the girl whom you offered up as a heart-restorer for my earlier attachment." "I'm thankful we are in the shadow," you laughed, "so that my red cheeks don't show. You are taking a most thoroughgoing revenge." "That was the last thought in my mind." "Then, my woman's curiosity having been appeased, be doubly generous and spare my absurd blushes. I don't know when I have been made to feel so young and foolish." "Clearly you are no hardened criminal, Miss Walton. Usually matchmakers glory in their shame." "Perhaps I should if I had not been detected, or if I had succeeded better." "You took, I fear, a difficult subject for what may truly be called your maiden experiment." "Did I not? And yet—You see I recognized potentialities for loving in you. You can—Ah, you have suggested to me a revenge for your jokes. Did you—were you the man who coined the phrase that my eyes were too dressy for the daytime?" "Yes," I confessed guiltily, "but"— "No, don't dare to try to explain it Though you spoke in evident gayety, I answered gravely: "You will forgive me when I tell you that it was to parry a thrust of Mrs. Polhemus's at you, and I made a joke of it only because I did not choose to treat her gibe seriously. I hoped it would not come back to you." "Every friend I have has quoted it, not once, but a dozen times, in my presence. If you knew how I have been persecuted and teased with that remark! You are twice the criminal that I have been, for at least my libel was never published. Yet you are unblushing." We both sat silent for a little while, and then you began: "You interrupted a question of mine just now. Was it a chance or a purposed diversion? You see," you added hastily, "I am presuming that henceforth we are to be candid." "I confess to an intention in the dodg "I hoped, after the trust of the other day—You do not want to tell me your story?" "Are there not some things that cannot be put into words, Miss Walton? Could you tell me your story?" "But mine is no mystery," you replied. "It has been the world's property for years. Why, your very help to-night proves that it is known to you,—that you know, indeed, facts that were unknown to me." "Facts, yes; feelings, no." "Do you appreciate the subtilty of the compliment? You really care for such valueless and indefinable things as feelings?" "Yes." "A bargain, then, while you are in this mood of giving something for nothing. Question for question, if you choose." "You can tell your secrets?" "To you, yes, for you have told me your greatest." "Then, with the privilege of silence for both, begin." "Ah, you begin already to fear the gimlet! Yes. Nothing is to be told that—There again we lack a definition, do we not? Never mind. We shall understand. You knew her in Germany?" "Yes." "And she—You wear a mask, at moments even merry-faced, but now and again I have surprised a look of such sadness in your eyes that—Is that why you came to America? She"— "No. She was, and is, in so different a class, that I never"— "You should not allow that to be a bar! Any woman"— "But even more, there are other claims upon me, which make marriage out of the question." "And this is why you have resigned "You draw it worse than it is, Miss Walton, forgetting that I told you of my happiness in loving." "You make me proud to feel that we are friends, Dr. Hartzmann," you said gently. "I hope she is worthy of such a love?" I merely nodded; and after a slight pause you remarked, "Now it is only fair to give you a turn." I had been pondering, after my first impulsive assent, over my right to win your confidence, with the one inevitable conclusion that was so clear, and I answered, "I have no questions to ask, Miss Walton." "Then I can ask no more, of course," you replied quietly, and at once turned the conversation into less personal subjects, until the time came for our return to My Fancy. When we parted in the upper hall, that evening, you said to me, "I always value your opinion, and it usually influences me. Do you, as your speech to-night implied, think it right to go on loving baseness?" "It is not a question of right and wrong, but only whether the love remains." "Then you don't think it a duty to crush it out?" "No. All love is noble that is distinct from self." You held out your hand. "I am so glad you think so, and that you spoke your thought. You have done me a great kindness,—greater far than you can ever know. Thank you, and good-night." Good-night, Maizie. |